Viruses (Jul 2023)

<i>Lavandula austroapennina</i>: Assessment of the Antiviral Activity of Lipophilic Extracts from Its Organs

  • Annalisa Chianese,
  • Claudia Gravina,
  • Maria Vittoria Morone,
  • Annalisa Ambrosino,
  • Marialuisa Formato,
  • Francesca Palma,
  • Francesco Foglia,
  • Bianca Maria Nastri,
  • Carla Zannella,
  • Assunta Esposito,
  • Anna De Filippis,
  • Simona Piccolella,
  • Massimiliano Galdiero,
  • Severina Pacifico

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v15081648
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 8
p. 1648

Abstract

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In a framework aimed at the recovery and enhancement of medicinal plants endemic to the territory of the Cilento and Vallo di Diano National Park, Lavandula austroapennina N.G. Passal., Tundis and Upson has aroused interest. An insight into the chemical composition of the corolla, calyx, leaf, stem, and root organs was carried out following ultrasound-assisted maceration in n-hexane. The obtained lipophilic extracts were explored using ultra-high-performance chromatography coupled to high-resolution mass spectrometry (UHPLC-ESI-QqTOF-MS/MS). The extracts from the different organs varied in their relative content of fatty acids, ursanes, and oleanane-type triterpenes. In particular, the oleanolic acid content appeared to increase in the order of corolla L. austroapennina at a concentration ranging from 12.5 to 400 µg/mL on the Vero CCL-81 cell line. Antiviral activity against herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1), alpha human coronavirus 229E (HCoV-229E), and poliovirus type 1 (PV-1) was evaluated via a plaque reduction assay in the same cellular model. All the extracts did not show cytotoxic effects after 2 and 24 h exposure times, and the antiviral efficacy was particularly important for the stem extract, capable of completely inhibiting the tested viruses at low doses. The antiviral activity in a non-enveloped virus PV-1 allowed the assertion that the extracts from the organs of L. austroapennina, and especially the stem extract, interfered directly with the viral envelope. This study underlines how much knowledge of a territory’s medicinal plant heritage is a harbinger of promising discoveries in the health field.

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